When the RCMP called her this past June, Serenity’s mother was surprised.

After all, it had been almost three years since her four-year-old daughter died at the Stollery Children’s Hospital.

It was Sept. 18, 2014, when Serenity was airlifted to Edmonton with catastrophic head injuries and severe hypothermia. She died nine days later, after being removed from life support.

No one has ever been charged in the little girl’s death, nor in relation to the physical and sexual abuse she appeared to have suffered before she died.

So imagine her mother’s confusion when RCMP told her they didn’t yet have all of her child’s official medical records.

“They told me they needed those papers before they could decide whether to charge someone or not,” said Serenity’s mother.

(I can’t name the mother under terms of Alberta’s Child, Youth and Family Enhancement Act, because to do so might identify Serenity’s surviving older half-siblings.)

RCMP said they needed her to sign a release to allow Alberta Health Services to release Serenity’s full file. Eager to co-operate, she signed the necessary papers. Then RCMP called her with what she calls “terrible news.”

Serenity, in a photo taken in February 2014, seven months before her death. By then, her arms were already skeletal, and she had cuts and bruises on her face. A ministerial panel on child intervention has been meeting to find ways to prevent similar deaths.Supplied

Alberta Health Services said they couldn’t release the records.

“They wouldn’t turn it over, not even with my signature.”

When she told me this story, I was gobsmacked.

How was it possible that it had taken almost three years for RCMP to request copies of Serenity’s full medical history? And how could AHS refuse to release such critical evidence?

Turns out, this is just the latest set of mistakes and miscommunications of the sort that have bedevilled the investigation of the Indigenous girl’s death over the last three years.

As the Journal first reported last November, Serenity had been removed from a foster home off reserve, where she was thriving, and placed, over the mother’s strenuous objections, with relations on reserve. Despite repeated reports of abuse, the province swiftly awarded permanent guardianship to those “kinship care” providers, and closed the files on Serenity and her two older siblings.

A year later, Serenity was hospitalized with blunt force trauma to her skull. Her body was covered in deep bruises and welts, not just on her arms and legs, but on her anus and vagina. The preschooler weighed just eight kilograms, less than 18 pounds, the typical weight of a nine-month-old baby.

Serenity’s mother took photos three days before her daughter’s death. “Reports can be hidden by the government. These pictures can’t.”supplied /
Edmonton

The Edmonton Police Service quickly opened an investigation. But because the three children lived outside the city, the case was handed to RCMP.

Normally, the RCMP would turn a homicide investigation over to its senior and expert major crimes unit. Instead, they kept the investigation with the local detachment. And there it remains.

Turns out, the RCMP did have many of Serenity’s medical records. But in some cases, they got photocopies of those documents from Serenity’s mom, and not from AHS.

So the Crown made police go back and start over.

“The Crown wants to make sure this is a full and fair investigation,” said RCMP spokesman Sgt. Jack Poitras. “We are trying to make sure all the protocols are followed and that all the evidence gathered will stand up in court. Even if the mother gave us documents from the doctor, we have to do it properly.”

When she arrived in hospital, Serenity’s body was covered in cuts and bruises, like this one on her leg.Edmonton

Fair enough. So why didn’t police request these records, through proper channels, three years ago? For that, there seems no answer.

Meanwhile, AHS is in a legal bind. It can’t just turn over all of Serenity’s private medical history. Under Alberta’s Health Information Act, the agency can release records “for the purpose of complying with a subpoena, warrant or order issued or made by a court.” But if RCMP don’t get the necessary order, AHS can’t release the documents. And it seems RCMP never applied for the necessary production order.

It is, to use the technical legal term, a complete gong show.

Alberta Justice has little to say about all this.

“This is an active case with the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service,” department spokesman Dan Laville told me by email this week. “Our understanding is that the RCMP has received the materials they have requested at this time. As this case is active, it would be inappropriate to comment further.”

Serenity’s mother has full custody of her older children, now 10 and eight, whom she believes were also abused and starved in the same home. But they won’t be returning to Alberta, she said, while the people she holds responsible for her children’s abuse are free.

Serenity, in a photo taken about a year before her death. As a toddler, she was at the 50th percentile for size. By the time she died, she was emaciated, with a weight less than half that of an average four-year-old.Edmonton

“You should be able to say to your children, ‘Yes, those bad people have gone away.’ A child should be able to feel safe,” said their mother.

She can’t understand the way authorities have handled this case.

“I feel that I’m not being told the truth, that there’s something going on in the background. They lead me on and lead me on and lead me on, and nothing’s being done.”

Comments

We encourage all readers to share their views on our articles and blog posts. We are committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion, so we ask you to avoid personal attacks, and please keep your comments relevant and respectful. If you encounter a comment that is abusive, click the "X" in the upper right corner of the comment box to report spam or abuse. We are using Facebook commenting. Visit our FAQ page for more information.